The New York Herald Newspaper, June 26, 1868, Page 4

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i ‘ NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1868—TRIPLE SHUBERT. ————- — i eetlten =~ nn cael pg in ansae meinen eee eC ment for four sr, ; IDENCY repeeee cate. Panking tae yen set | tnelude one cent paid Ta ee Cot te tates zits creditor ad. Te onde ae one | AngcKcenses of the radical party. Thor Desitats, | the unqualified and most infamous acheme of throw- THE P. © | Sit because the system Tacivas tax upon | Brincipal of the debt. The coat of government | caunot ‘help the national prosperity, but is nade a | hands of ten mpatineed with those who at | te State into the arms of Atrica may turn ‘0 ‘ci people of eutere atiions dontars m gold pom A Pieheae™ out | heavy load m the country, the real cause of our | tempted its overthrow. They naiuraliy, therefore, | Plagne tbe inventors.” | . ~ _— car commery from =e + wae thas the dat have “spent tn time of EE y a Sor aaa Nee Met wut the mone: teSembodimentot ; ype eet. : i Reltese a tw Fe tic State Convention in Maine warned the Bast aaa aginst 28 unwise policy. Serko Splines whats ste lomocrats apent one- Was ot ubod in good 0 nl, forthe debe ‘walle he tees aoe oe “4 was the largest oer béid tm that State by any party. THe © ‘wiruour RETURN. st 3 nor in. good, bh to ‘OF, licals are yelling 4 tireat Gathering of the Democracy Tot Fad ate Wet aid the of the aa- | ill alow therm te spend fre ollara were, the | aot paid what should have ey but tae aed inaued of the past, nek yet Tale | acca. Maclenypl wil. glee tee tacts reson at Cooper Institute. outa, what are aune of thorny All of the States is Koy spans £106, 210,065 beyond Bis. t did’ | the'nation’s credit, Kept up taxation by keeping up mea ane weeny ceed tine pre, | ll of it. ‘ are beawily but goume of them get back se PO es Y ears Of | the rate of interest, wi eit aan the value of the which rh A bitter pill for the radicals in Maine—Pilisbury. aare~vhnhidennne | mech, come Gave Sen, oul, eters | tne cost of the War Department ‘an war, | bonds, and with them cal lown the paper cur- | loathe that ioein im anon every J. A. Linscott, of Franklin, and M Biggs, fone ~ ‘nuinery ena moval pene ten Wenere 186 al. We and tite cost of the ‘ar part. | Bat Brine policy or tees Mune, ay ane : prehension the distuict soa Liew with 8p; | Sagadahoc, have been selected es dalegatcn to ino . 1 ‘. Lay arr radical . Speech ‘of Ex-Governor Seymour on the Diates get nothing back he cost, of indian mare taking Deets own Cae cae mad folly, we could to-day borrow money as cleaply | Violence has where Tose acc turn. | Fourth of July Convention, with 8. R. Carter and 8. war, ape et the South. this fella these years yeh apne way, ; as Great Britain; bat we have cursed the ampere. ing hopefully, whose | C. Andrews, of Oxford, as alternates. ¥ H next heaviest my ‘om the dent. The g gwaan, ture of more than | the laborer, She pensioner, the public creditor, for the | election they are persuaded wilt care ‘and : Questions of the Hour. Went get oat @ gmat yum ack ost of Wi pal to during the war. ‘Tue cost of the Navy Depariaient sake of cursing he poopié ofthe South with inllary Teform these abuses. Under the beuige devine | The song, “I Love the Military,” very good in. ite on ‘onan ba. ee cuneaees. to tag Week on tach publican Bit atlinaleh Tt 8025 WED paid off one-atth of one deb Ohad ki tote ea my more Feige a the they be- | Way, has been changed in democratic circles to “No insane ube are practically premiums gives to Eastera maau- Wag te teri ae a peoi corms 742 | down the cos of government, had mived peace to | economy assume ‘in the ‘public gr erty yecrsyp povelut aplpnaree i facturere. wy thy gs fae ae ree, egos a we our Union, had it up indgary order | affairs, and order and harmony be (8. C.) as a device Keview of the Financial Condi- boNDHOLDERS AXD THE NATIONAL CURAENCY. | the rank of cominercial Powers. Our ships | nite Hout. not one of | the ovils | which | now land. . that the and motto for the radicals in that State:—A negro . Nati ‘The division of the favors Le Were on every sea and were to be found in every | would have been changed. (“That's 80,” and. ‘hich and white man clasping hands fraternally; @ scrub tion of the Nation. trbating baking ” eta us | port “American is now by our tari policy | pisuse, We demand that our currency salt bomade Ie peee B® | oak in the distance with’ upturned radios; the amen ‘oGwasive distinction ts that =} loubled. The year ending ain day 3 it ie by pecertiaat aye jy see we Tooting heir woe —, opis” and “Dowm with the infernai third of But the War ment | are Measures which will pull down business both Tue Cooper Institute was denscly crowded last | Kinds of moony tuo mouey Torte od | Som 2 78.808.404 which Is more than its cost | aud call Zor those whicty aha iit ‘up the | the old Fielding something of the nitraimn | Tere are not exactly two delegations to the Demo- evening in response to an invitation tendered by | the business maa, Rvery, how put out during AE of = dee, eee Rational credit. When we stop the waste which {ihlon has hitherto, are on | cratic National Convention from South Carolina. It the Jackson Club—a young men's,democratic organ- | is's government falsehood. for it claims to be worth | War’ xor cre, Goes ona, year’ of Codtuerachicn Wit enable: oa Gor Lececermaeeey aatie {there ie Aaa hls meatal grout ee hat | 1s true they were appointed by two conventions, but iation—to listen to an address from ex-Governor | more then, li real veloc, aBd b Gee aoeer. the tae. | more than four years of war, then aift."but ‘the | the rates paid” by other nations we ‘shall sad%a the | False the standatd of tinnnenr eae tat te det | the Whole represent the democracy of the State. Horatio Seymour upon the political situation. The | chenic and the farmer. An’ ‘chief of one poy dS King say Sas See oe perond, fot dignity and power of our Union. When we give | tined 2 triumph. Extreme men may for 8 ume The New Orieans Picayune, a sound and influen- stage was tastefully festeoned with national flags | of the tribes from whom we land at an F Ee eto tera teal een Ree ease ee ery ee eee ans wag thelr heads, but the masses of | tial representative of Southern sentiment, says “the and portraits of Jackson . nd Seymour. ae Te, Ca 8 tiven the repubiicans the full benefit of their pro- | military and n we shall relieve the wil Chase movement, in all its aspects, is an auspicious At eight o'clock Governor Seymour arrived, and | Giang by Dromiaing ‘nem a0 may dollars each year. Zee (Pad a, Bay ds PS Dur we, taxpayer, e holder and, Give strength and ‘one for success. in the coming election by the demo- as he was approaching the platform the whole | that now it paid ry which was a lie, forthe War nt in that year, wy Taaibaen tga on er omacuietice eaiveeiee cratic party, if it shall not be ruled by cliques, who audience rose en masse and cheeered him with Ry S...5 8 a pH and ‘did you 858,490 this year? if | tne policy of the past three years. It will be as hu: refuse to forego selfish squabbles for the sake of w great enthusiasm, one enthusiastic the simple truth, Of all the devices to cheat mermae A A eg ner ae common triumph in a great cause, and insanely aght Senator Cusames, the President of the club, im in- } labor, to paralyze industry to degrade public oe gh pt ph ee Rennie eth pee ae each other to their mutual ruin, as the Jews of old troducing the orator, aald:—We are actuated by no | 8nd to Aen Dainese, Pett ining standard at | srity., Did you waste money this year, oF are Your | our money to pay our debts would have helped ts it did when Titus was battering the walis of Jerusa- desire in calling @ meeting at this hour to influence | yaiue, @ debased and currency. I have not Mae ah ie lo the same for us ture. em. ’ the action of any person or any delegate to any | thus set forth the ondion of a evant for the ply Ll pred the future, for they To tha toll Weare pledged. ‘There ts not ne man The Revolution (women’s rights and radical) re- branch of the convention that 1s to meet to nominate | pv pig BO gh WHAT A WISE USE OF THE PUBLIC FUNDS WOULD int. It ever been charged that 18 marks:—‘The spleen and spite of the radical repab- a victorious candidate on the next 4th day of July; Haars, oe wr ‘Of their leaders say that weve nna Le. de the nooey petngs hai! ee asian sees ee licans towards Judge Chase can be accounted for bat we simply wish to counsel with each other | we have no plans for relief of our coun- | paia for military, naval and other expenses bad been | the tocar: he Week ory ach pete i | Baeteat'e ‘enterprises, ‘they are not ia tke habit ur | OMI oa the hypothesis of envy and jealousy. He here with our great chief before that conven- | {7; that pointing out wrongs is of Ro use unless We | used to pay the debt, to-day the credit of the United | use the public money to pay the public debt. It is a | allowing themselves to De defeated in their under: | #ANds sublimely above them, and the inteligent States would have been as good as that of Great Britam. This rapid payment and the proof it would have given of oe ee would have carried the 3¢. simple, brief, but a certain remedy for our national | takings. The word ‘fail’ is not a common one in | among them must know it. Whether maieay, Our ailment is debt aggravated by despo- | the BL pt el men as Join W. Frazier, | democratic party up to his own pad pie chp m2. ‘Theod Cuy! fol YAXATION INCREASED BY THE NATIONAL DEBT, ence, General Wistar, William B. Thomas and | 4°Ubtful as the republicans pretend to regard {t. bot one thing that is asked of that con- | mean to meet the case and cure vention, and that is that they shall remember | Other things which have caused an: 4 i | & 1 ordered state of our Union, is the fact that our gov- | would be worth much more in the hands of the hold- | _In another way the republicans do a constant | other gentlemen who’ took part in that meet- | But that re more oe ema of Oe ee: that they ahall be warned by | ernment bonds apy 5 Siege of | ers, and yet the taxpayer would be better off, for | wrong to the bondholders In answer to Sompiaints ing. Frey have enlisted heart and soui in the pA Bd saint net 98 Bh rane, ihe sad experience of previous political contests, | our country. The fA ae J LK. d the cost of government would be cut down as its | of heavy taxation, they Boy it cannot be helped with | cause of their favorite: candidate, and giving to it 5 4 and that they shall let the dead past bury its dead; | ings Im 2 large Gegree, Milo, nds Tite earnings | Credit rose. We could put out new bonds, beor- | our heavy debt, and thus throw the whole odium on.| the energy and determination for which they areso | 4 Paper called the Missionary Record, published that whoever the candidate may be shall not be b vings banks, life inourance — other forms ing less interest, which would not have the odious | the debt. Why do they not tell the truth and say one- | disting they will make themselves ¢elt in the | in Charleston, S. C., has an editorial articie under ha } Into sa’ . ks, artes ane ee pony ys from taxation. Our debt wor ve | third of our taxation 18 made by our debt? Then ne, Convention. Moreover, his elevated | the caption of “The Whirlwind Com ” hampered by any policy or by any platform, as was | of money ee ae oo, oo oy been or interest lower and our taxes they will be asked, what makes the two-thirds? This | character, his acknowledged fitness and the pre- jeth—Beware, at staiésman and pure hearted man, George B. | Tested In government, honds. | the aieual Im Onis | The hours of labor could be shortened. What now question they do not want to have asked, and they | valent and growing opinion that he ls the man for inelting the negroes to acts of violence. A number McClellan. (Loud cheers, amd a voles—Whia de | ane banks heed --| = ons af lengthens the time of toil? a egy ‘any | do not want to answer. When they do answer the | the crisis—the only winning man—there is litt'edoubt | of incendiary fires have lately occurred. General ; As ses shows that must be at on ene | form of taxation, direct or indi six hours of | eyes of all classes will be opened. ‘They will be forced | that thelr views will obtain favor with its members | Canby has not yet su; the vu thiwis of that, Horatio®”) shave now the honor | of money thus deposited in all the States, work would earn as much as ten do now. One hour | to say that last year they spent, by reports of Com- | and ultimately be adopted by the majority requisite set eupycetsed the sect. 1» introduce the orator, patriot and statesman, he of | SyeTage of, the Seposite im yay in the State, more of work ought to, mest a laborers share of the | mittee of Ways and Means, $310,178,000, and this in | to secure his nomination, | Be a Reiter we nd experienced statesman of hom history w - e 1 $ e third year o! e our well meaning wi at witnesses “con- nsylv; writ editor ngusta whit story wil Speak Se ESRE Ncw TOT RCN | Centers ee Sie Feats ng cat troy, ork {S| share of the national debt. He now works two hours | re ablicay friends we srappose. Tie interest of the | suimtmarion so devoutly Yo be wisied.™, The hearta (Ga.) Chronicte (kino tap 9. ys bree son—Governor Horatio Seymour. about Ave hundred oasend om ot more each day than he ought to pay for the military | debt took most of it. Oh, no; that took $149,418, of patriots, now trembling for the safety of their ng the status of Southerm dele- m isn 0 ‘eddrees the sudienee Governor | Seton, fs Wil maze te Beneer of SspeeRtt TS | scieete®”'nrtce ft beoets i Siet eks isos | Soha ee ee ee ee ee a aT a Oe Cala ca aa Searention 4 . a 7 a ments, which was $149,472,165; \- ankfulness Ww! ows:—“* SE : UR Was again loudly applauded. He spoke as the 0 torglgresy be ee on the & Feng make a day's ino whl Pes up al of taxa- sides thewe rate $80,292,513 ‘or other thine Pe Why Peace and prosperity to the nation. FAN of coming rts" Believe te delegates from the South onght fo lows: juarter population to present themselves and take part in the National i i i that is $20,000,000 more than the democrats spent for 5 “i posits in savings ban! It t# now usual for men | gtarve, But the wise and honest use of this ‘penses rom hase Representati the Solid or. | Convention as representatives not recon- spread crange in Potica feeling. as tue erie of co Tri aivta ot tr caine a ane = ganee would not have opp cer +) put Yogetner. at why ayo Apend $8 6h6r3 on tr ipa ests of the pectin - structed States, bor or the original jplel Py they ex- erminent a «i themselves the best m e NAY, when forme! cost \- av! Publics party are driven from tty ranks” ar | Ha abou Aoi, abd the amount, of tasrance | mpecie vane, it woud have cared up our ctrreney | nually? Has American shipplag” grown, to mck wars Pores, Tene 28/1000" CE or hameee di fet woke Oe tat oe e Convention Its poiicy was shaped in a great ‘ heyy f 10 the value of specie. plan of making our cur- | that we have to keep up vast navies to protect editorials advising inati 2 ation a e hy those who’ are’ most’ violent, in thelr | # 88cred trust, as it ts a fund laid aside for thelr fami- Our tari re ota preeminent it? Oh, no, ir tariffs have swept American void, and that the judicial tribunais some: day ships from the ocean; we have lost the carrying | Chase by the Democratic Convention are of great declare It 80.” ee at my trade; the British have got that. Then why don’t | ability andtruthfuness. You represent in these, as Thi you give the builders of merchant ships the money | in almos teverything else, the great interests of the ie Philadelphia Press (radical) asserta that five spent on the navy by way of drawback on duties? country, irrespective of individuals or parties. Had thousand radical voters lie together in one part of x ‘ould that start work at our shipyards? Oh, yes, - North Carolina. That's an odd admission fora half the cost would doit. Then, why is it not done? | you sixty days more to impress your views on the ‘tell We did not think of it, really; we have been so busy | community I am confident that Mr. Chase would be | PeF Proverbial for telling the truth, with the impeachment and ne; juestions that we The Louisville Democrat Torgot Our sailors and mechauicss But we soc iney | Selected as the most suitable and the most available Lo i comes out strongly im the War Department spent this year $123,858,468, representative of democratic principles in the | favor of Thomas A. Hendricks as the democratic when the year before it spent only about $95,000,000, | CO™Mng canvass. Ags to his statesmanship, his | candidate for President. Who's Hendricks? The longecre have the more the army costs. financlal ability and experience, and his tried | 4 aneer statement is made in the Chicago Post, the How is this? Well it costs a great deal to keep aol: | 2omesty, there is but one opinion; as to his diers and Freedman’s Bureau nts and to gfe camara’: ar is a diversity of opinions, He | best politically conducted radical paper in the Weat, feed | has and clothe negroes at the uth. But why opposition to the democracy in | It is to the effect that Judge Chase's letter, which so do you do it? act ne hegroes. support them- Se aon anor inebneraadaawnrtest vo cream much aroused the opposition of the democrata to Tatton 1g" Mand inet a | tan Gato err eng fein way | As Romito, "yn undertnd ty hare. Africans. True; but by so doing we get their votes, | We Should not him in complete unison with | strictly private; its publication was the work of = ourselvelves, I have just been throu; Kentucky, and face yg Reif one Freon, ye to Con- Indiana and New York and have se rsons here treacherous foe, who approached its author in the eile a majority of the oe Sf the Uritet stags | from every section of the country. Wherever the | guise of a friend.” Well, what are you going to do A in nine States have only eighteen. The | topic Soe eaon ee been Ce youre sich, about it? ease, ~ Convent ir, Chase seemed e Ol ol f Pre Bena ate ia vopeal encore the ih ore a those who-apparently represented the intelligentand | There has not yet been reported another sculling for our advantage; we have managed it so that one- | Substantial class of voters, republicans as well as match between the Pendleton democracy and the uarter of the people have more power in the Senate | @¢mocrats. The ral expression has been, “We | Miami tribe in Cincinnati. That giass is shivered. than the three-quarters. We now own the negroes are at peace, military men have done their part; now | 4 question among revenue place seekers {s,.who ta ena money t We tow bee Se bly Ege lessen our taxes and collect those that are imposed; | Perry Fuller? They suppose him to be a Massachusctts now see why the credit of our country is 0 tainted; | 2OW our vast debt may be most easily paid; how our | periauger. The Boston Datly Advertiser, June 25, we now see why the value of our paper money is Teenie andetbeteean bo itey in rebelionkan most says he 1s entirely unknown to the country, and ber cg Mtl tha nny ene arbigeld anne ld persons named, Mr. Chase can best accomplish the | yet it goes onto assert that Fuller's patronymic “ie rency ss good as gold by contractings its volume iif up tts vilue, by getting Fid of the teint up - we uift up ue, int upon the national credit, it harms no one, it blesses all. Now our tenders and bank currency must be debased while our nattonal bonds stand discredited. ‘y must rise ther, They are all based upon the national credit. Bank motes cannot them: Tf, then; the "$00,000,000" hatl"been duly i, b july and honestly used to ry day the taxpayers would have been relieved, the mechanic, la! and pensioner would be paid in coin, or money good as coin, and would net be cheated out of one-quarter of their dues by false dollars. The holders of bonds in sav banks or passions and ost biutal in the policy they urge | Hes when the insurers die. All of the funds of sav- our people. While the ablest republicans refuse | {1 ,vernment bonds, but they hold an amount wirich on with @ party which tramples upon the | would cripple or ruin them if the bonds are not clary, usurps power and is unsettling all ideas of | Wort cg hhe On ti “ienased Mf we add the political morality and unhinging all the business trusts fee widen ‘and o1 ans we ana that fully two machinery of our land, we are laboring under some millions five hundred thonsand parsons are taaprenson embarrassments fromm the great volume of the in government bonds, who are not capitalists and change in our favor. ‘Those who are rallying around | (7, Sovernment, bonds, who at prent under the standard of constitutional rights have heretofore | {yRO sre compulsory OW HERS St Pret Pri er held condteting views with regard to the events of stateot things will make a clashing of interests be- the past eight years, and the question is how can we set this great majority in the feld ao ar- | It's" cial that out opponents ‘hope that it wil rayed that they can drive out of place the | hinder us from going Into. the contest with compact disciplined and desperate horde of officeholders | Hinder, le from gotng itt, te CO Tver a who now misgovern our country? This is the only | this aspect may be, | am sure there is a pole © problem to besettied. The American people are dis- | he marked out which will harmonize all jarri gusted with the conauct of the Congressional party. | Pe marked oul which will harmon ne Can we mark out a policy which will unite the | rom an unwise conduct of public affairs. ‘They Nowe majority under our standard’ This can only be come up like fogs of night from fens; they rise Gan Ata eran from uuwholescine, darkened counsele: ama wil el he same time we must be out en rt 4nd must confront all the questions which perplex | SWay before the light and life ofa clear and a policy. Is it true 4 Us, Men look forward with hope and with fear to | the taxpayers and the bondholders have confileting ; bess interesis which will hinder them from acting Liallipae AEeak ot conan ee in upholding constitutional right? Why are the tax- shall not speak of candidates, Let the claims of payers laboring uncer a debt which bears an interest each one be considered in a courteous and kindly of six per cent, while other governments can borrow spirit, and let us take care that no personal partisan- money at three per cent, and at chis low interest ship shall draw us aside from our duty to our country. their bonds sell for better prices than ou! Ww We should support with hearty zeai every upholder the laborer, the farmer, the mechanic, and the pen- of constitutional rights. It is upon discord in our | sioner paid in bad money, so that, the | sani Tee tienen cumoneds Valid ESI hanes. ory 4 quarter lees, than they ace ented to co every orn Of strife naturally loot 0 selfisi ions to ar keep it alive, ‘Let this hope be crushedout by our | Paper dollar paid to them? Why is the bondholder S Hy £ E question how should be paid, for this question ws out of the follies of those in’ power and will disappear when they ir from the places they now hold. The would no longer eon Wi the taxation which has been used to hurt, not to help, his claim. THE CHICAGO CONVENTION PLEDGED TO THE NEGRO AND MILITARY POLICY. If a wise, an honest use of the public money would have done We in the past, it will do itin the future, But the republican party, at Chicago, pledgea itself, by its nominations and resolutions, to cep up its negro and military policy. It is impossi- ble to give untutored Africans at fhe South uncon- trolled power over the government, the property and laws of the people of ten States, by excluding white action, It will, in the present state of our country, | WTonged by the tainted credit of the government 9 | votes, without inilitary despotism. You cannot give cent; we now see why our laborers and pensioners | €248 we have in view.” associated with corrupt contracts, and a with ring of be an unholy thing to go into the July Convention | that he cannot sell his bond for as much by one-third | to three millions of more Senators than are | are cheated by false dollars. If the mechanic cares bemagesneet West rers. who been implicated with any purpose which. shall not have in view the | 2% the citizen of Great Britain gets for the bond of | gtiowed to. fifteen mil bse ngieaermaaes: — ea oe of white men living in New York, Pennsyivania, Ohio, Ilinota, In- —_. ere Towa, apes ny Matra and ichigan without keeping up grea! ing armies, Without a general amnesty and a restoration of suffrage to all the whites in the South, a great stand- ing army must be a permanent institution. In order tocurse the South with miliary despotism, negro rule and disorganized labor and in ry, they cursed the farmers of the North with taxation, the mechan- tes with more hours of toil, the laborers and pension- ers with debased paper: the merchant with a shift- ing standard, and the public creditor with a dis- honored und tainted national faith, Are these classes to turn and to see how each can push the burdens upon each other, or are they to know why he works so many hours let him may Chase the Representative Man of the Time, the reports of the Secretary of the Treasury. It is | To THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD:— ciear why business is hindered and business men |. We now know why the public creditor | There mever was such an opportunity offered a rplexi Ee" harassea by our dishonored credit and the tax- | Minority party to command the situation at once as payer ts hunted down by the taxgatherer, The negro | is now open for the democrats. And there is just tmiiitary policy of the republican party is at the bot- The little that can be learned about him is not to his tom of all these troubles. We now get at the | Oe way Gal aout other enter Rowen tb Go tt. credit.” etwerl . |. | They must show they possess the indispensable quali- po Sean nomtaanene™ ind eae en fication of good general, who, it is said, knows General Grant starts for the Rocky Mountains on are pledged to keep up the negro and | When he is whipped, and must evoke a spirit in har- | Monday, June 29. Those politicians who hang to his military policy, with all its cost and taxations, rae Bg accomplished facts. If they will see and | ooat-tail will have a long-ron of it, unless they leave ‘These will be greater hereafter. The government of | 40 this they will find themselves prepared to come the South is to go into the hands of the negroes, We | Up to Mr. Chase’s standard of statesmanship, and | the General to his repose and his Connecticut par- have said they are unfit to be voters at the North. | Will nominate him for the Presidency by acclama.- | ticular on the “wild rolling prairie, ‘rhe republicans say they shall be governors at the | tion, and Reverdy Johnson would be very acceptable cr re r} his government which bears a lower interest? and 3 —- Ti ott from the men who now why is his cuatm made odious in the exes of the peo- HOW THE NEXT ELECTION WILL BE ConpvcTED, | Dl? by the fact that his inte Less read The next election will be controlled by thoughtful | While they are compelled to take debased paper? business and laboring men. No party can gain their UNIFORMITY OF CURRENCY—HOW TO OBTAIN IT. support unless fis tone and temper show that itseeks | It is clear to every thoughtful mam that public to yet our country out of its troubled condition, | Saiety and honor will not admit of our having two Appeals to prejudice and passion will have no | kinds of currency for any length of time. We weight. These were tried at the late Re- | must have a uniform currency for ali classes, There publican Convention. 1 need not say with | is but one question to be settled. Shall our currency What cold indifference they have been received by | be uniformly good or uniformly bad? Are we to force the public. The quiet, watchful citizens who seek | the bondholder to take bad money, or are we to give for the protection of a wise administration of govern- | to labor and business good money? Are we to have ment now turn their eyes upon us. We must look to | 40 honest standard of value for all, or are industry, it that we take no position which will not bear the | enterprise and morality to be perplexed and disor- many of the iniquities notorious at Washingtom during the season.” The Advertiser adds:—“We know nothing of Mr. Fuller personally, save the fact that the atmosphere of dishonesty is around him. closest scrutiny. dered bya shifting and dishonest standard? If it] to make common cause and ‘do away with | South. We are clearly opposed to this policy. We | 28 @ candidate for the Vice Presidency. Chase is the WENDELL PHILLIPS’ OP.NION OF CHIEF JUSTICE CHASE. UY FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE COUNTRY can be shown that a!l these evils under which the curses of a bad government? If the vepub- | have seen how much it Ths cost the taxpayer, the | best representative man known in America to admin- ore upon our attention, Aimong the evil re- | » then it is clear that | lican policy prevails this sirugyle must begin, | bondholder and the laborer in the past three years, | ister the government for the next four years of peace, _, (From the Anti-Slavery Standar(.} moneyed and tax policy, the most hurt- volmon effort to root out | Either the laborer or the capitalist must go down. | it will be as hurtful in the futare. ‘e have alsoseen | Many in the republican party, to which I belong. ask Facilis descensus Avert, of which we may take as fulis the jealousies it our couniry. It has div and creditor States, It builds up favored inter- | g00d as coin. One ts to contract its volume Thade between sections of | the polley which’ sheds such widespread curse ided our Union intodebtor | There are two ways of waking our paper money Both cannot live under it and men must choose be- tween. H,on the other hand, the policy of selfish ambition and of sectienal hate is pul down, our how our policy of using the money to our debts | the democrats to give us an opportunity to extend to | counterpart, if not free translation, the old sayi woud have tielped the taxpayer, the bondholderand | them our hands. oats \Hell 18 paved with good intentions.” Scotia the laborer in the past. It will 'doas much in the hints the same trath in her proverb, “A Haggis (pud- ests aud crushes out the industry of other | ing tn the legal tenders, This will make theu e | country will start upon a new course of prosperit future. The whole question is brought down to th ‘The Young Democracy for Chase. ding), God bless her, can cli down hill.” There's cinsses. It taxes toil and lets some form of | and willforce a specie standard, but it will carry | and all classes will reap in common the fruits of clear potnt—shall we use our money pay our debe To THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD:— never any trouble in getting downward when @ man wealth go free from the cost of the gov. | ruin and bankruptcy into every part of our country. | good government, (Great applause.) relieve the taxpayer, make our money good in I have from pretty good authority that Ho- | lone for it, Among our wislies there ls always gue ernment. It gives to laor and business a debased | It will bear down the prices of property and THE QUESTION TO BE DETRRMINED AT THE NEXT | hand of the laborer or pensioner and help the bond- i Aaron’s rod which @ually devours all the rest. Mr. money and to the untaxed boudholder steriing | javor. It is a policy wnich cannot be LRCTION. volder ? of shall we use it to keep up military des- | Tatlo Seymour will be nominated for President by | Justice Chase wishes to be an abolitionigt, but he coin,” These curses upon honest industry have grown | Tied through, for the country will not con- The next election will turn upon this question:— | potism, feed idle negroes, break down the judiciary, | the convention to be held July 4. They will make a | longs to be President. This longing ts his up like i! weeds among the sacred interests of con- | Sent to it. There is another way of lifting up our | Can the Congressional party succeed in their eiforts rersal shackle the Executive and destroy all constitutto: great mistake, as I have talked with a number of renee aod Garces: or aif national debt rignts ? - oung republicans, radical and conservative, and | in gold. But he longs to outbid Pen- I have said neue rt tenn ‘of or inst the | they would vote for Mr. Chase if nominated, I be- | dieton before the Democratic Convention. tracts, trusts and the fruits of labor until we are | greenbacks to par, whic . will not harm any, but will troubled how to root out the tares sown by evil | Help all, which wiil bring back contidence, will re- spirits, without killing the crops planted and tilled | Vive business and enterprise, will lighten taxation, toexcite and array the industrial and moneyed inter- esis against each other, or will these unite and tarn out the authors of the mischief under whict Uh by houest industry. wilt give to labor honest money and will do justi all suffering’ The only hope of our opponents ts long to the young democracy, and I know from fre- | See how reluctantly, like the Jew under King John’s THE NEW YORK DEMOCRATS IN 1962. to the public creditor. - And that way Is to give to ali | discord where there should be harmony aud comeret toe Premoency oa the democratic side. T have aaid | quent conversation with them that thelr cholce 1s | pincers, he parts with his teeth to save old; Lest it should be felt that what I have to say on | the world fuli faith in the honor and wisdom of the | of action. : only what each one agrees to and is in favor of. No | Mr. Chase and that the dead issues be buried. parts with his professions (he never had tay prinot this point springs from any views about the candt- | American government. Our paper money ts not at APPEAL OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. man bas been named who ts not in favor of reducing ples) to save his chances of nomination. At the out diates or action of the National Convention I will go | Par in coi because the national credit is dishonored. back to the first years of tne civil war, when | How can the notes of our government which pay no the democratic pariy of New York — took | interest be worth their face tn gold or silver when its position upon the financial policy of gov- | the bonds of the government which pay six per c ernment. In the elections of 1862 it was | interest are worth only eighty cents on the dollar discussed before our people. We then pointed | You cannot make the hotes put ont by bunks worth out the great evils which now trouble us asthe sure | more than the bonds which secure these notes. results Of the errors of those who were shaping our | It is a sad thi to say that our credit moneyed system. To show clearly how we then | ($ dishonored in the markets of the world, tried to avoid these dangers, let me read some pas- | Dut it is true, and it must be said if we suges from the message of a democratic Governor to | are to find a remedy. It is humiliating to find the Legislature, in January, 1863. In his position he | that when Great Hritam borrows $1,000 for twenty spoke, after agenerai consultation, for the great party | Years it pays the lender bat ¢: o when if we make which had just placed him in the Executive chair. | th ine loan we have to pay $2,700 to the lender, Positions taken many years ago could have no re- payer, if we wish to get ference to the personal wishes or purposes ‘of this at the cause of debaved currency in the hands of the day. 4 will 8 of the questions which now agitate | lalvo our country inthe light of the warnings we = ut- | honored, for it is a tainted credit that sinks alike the tered. In the Convention of 1862 the nominee of the | value of bonds, of greenbacks and bank notes, democratic party of the State of New York for the | Make the credit of the United states as good as that office of Governor used the words:— of he ven Ne or of ao ae in Fe Le goneen bare vw | OF of a hortgage on a farm and our troubles would wed cg a eramene Oot of thin war will sive revoke "ex. | disappear. if we make our paper money good Clusively ins few Acantic States, Look upon the map of | by @liarsh system of contraction we shail cripple Tn our Stat at the last election, we appeaied to | expenses and thus maki our © as as | Constitutional Government Versus Military | 8¢t what lavish waste of excellent indignation on the all classes to help us save New York from malagov ra old. No man has teen’ pated who iProe in Government. vart of his frends when some telltale correspondents ment, and all came up to the rese favor of cutting down military expenses. No N Minted ie poenibiley OF, Bie. sccanyng, &:Aemmearatie ge of seventy thousand. Let w man has been named who is not in favor of CANAJONARIE, N. Y., June 22, 1868, nomination! is thy servant a dog that he should all classes of interests throughout the Un using the money drawn from the taxpayers to | To THE Eprtor OF THE HERALD:— do this thing?” But all that virtuous horror could before the people with these facta, at pay the public debt. No man has been named Your articles in regard to Chase are read with deep not rub, out of the public thought that ‘damned & change w hich will sweep the wrong doers from their | who ts not in favor of @ general amnesty to the ‘There is spot.’’ So in due time the Cincinnatl Gazette states places. | We say to the bondholder and tothe laborer | people of the South, No man has been named who | interest by all classes of men. ‘There is no use to | with Chase-like, ponderous, semi-oMicial dignity that who has put bis money into savings bank, wedo not | is not an upholder of constitutional rights, No man | talk about policy of government so long as it 1s un- | doubtless Mr. Chase would accept such nomination if Wish to harm you, we do not seek to give you bad | has been named by the democratic 'y whose elec- | certain what kind of government we are to have. the democratic party would come to him and plant money, t ood currency for ail. It will not | tion would not help the taxpayer, t sioner, the hi itself on his ie form. Then his tempted, restless virtue help us to break down. the credit of your ‘bonds; | laborer and the pondholder. On the omer hand: the | The Presidential contest will decite whether we are | waits a while to see what the party will do. That it keeps up our taxes by making us pay candidates of the republican party are edged to | to have a constitutional government or not. If we | lazy good for nothing manifests no disposition to rst; bul We ask you to help save ws as (ax- | their past policy, which has sink the value of our | 4Fé to have pwreet government all our specula- | wash and put on clean garments. Precious time is Payers from the cost of thé negro and military pokey | carrency more than eight per cent in the past two tions on the subject of policy of government amount | running fast to July 4. So somebody is found, or at the South, Iti# hard for us to pay you tf you let | yeara. The discount upon our paper money was | ‘nothing. Let us first establish constitutional gov- | or imagined, to give the impatient Judge an oppor- men in power take the money we give in taxes to | twenty percent in April, 1860; {t is now about twenty- | ernment and then talk about its policy. The great | tunity to come do little in his price. He lete it Feduce your cialius and you support them while they | nine per cent. It wilt continue to godown under the | object In the Presidential election is to establish con- | be known that if universal su can be secured use it 10 uphold military despotism. We see clearly | same policy, As it Sinks It will increase taxes, it Tals object wen be accomplished With Chiase, white fi cratetwitee ay recomniticn ‘of state. sovereignty aad that a state of afuire which will compel you curse | r anger is Of her ca : to take @ debased currency will force, every | pull more the resus gedit, for tee greater ths pre- | Must be regarded doubtful with any other candidate. | a grant of universal amnesty. For a white this ts {aporer, farmer. mechanic” and creditor to | sntum on gold the harder it becomes to pay specie 11 (or husetts) Let. Gemocrats. rank’ and fle saws negro, nid tader ake 868 Gehased § currency thule y le el lof Massnc! 8) = Game woe ah Waalo voudhelder and his claims become more | Hon. Samu looper’s iis Soe thon, wih two g's is well. if your | to ¢ Spell the Union and se how small is the territory 0 which it will | the energies of the country and make bankruptcy | issue of greentacks it wo: ame. ter of Deciension. the Alpha and Omega of American democracy. > bi o 0 ¢ , . “ PERORATION. 0. 4 oCracy business and destroy sober industry und mabe et | tee ee They tke away from him one-quarter of lus pension | Witt Which you honored me | expressed the purpose | eniarged upon inthe “Eplsties of Nasby. Slowly pave been Practiced. It te’ beid ‘arpely where. tne ccnsthu Beatie ontent te Uitkeas Gr Reottinetet went mar: | joaiciary ey honest administration would have made It worth its poeta in regard to the approsching elpetion teem Seid‘ the Dukevot: Saree is the Grunkeo Dake'ot tion gives « disproportional share of political power. ket with ther money in their vest. pockets and | cuucutite wound, Atul bet face im gold. What rignt bave they ¥o call Bpoe the. fo render it proper that I should now revert to that | Norfolk, iping sn the mud, Moos. can ft you THE GOVERNOR'S MESSAGE IN 1863. brought back their dinners in thelr baskets; in the | not punish crime nor protect mechanic aud iaborer? They have lengthe declaration, aud to say that nothing has since oc- | up; but I will do the next best thing—I'll ie down In his message to the Legislature in 1863 the demo- | end they took their money in their baskets and took cratic Governor, speaking of the pubiic credit, fore- | lome thetr dinners tn their vest pockets. Make our shadowed our dishonored condition at the time in tear gocd by an honest and wise course, and when these words:— this 8 done it will be worth twenty-five per cent the hours of their toil to feed swarms of oMicehold- ” . " arred to change the purpose I then announced. with you.” So now we have the last bid; Pendleton SS tee Tere Cae te campers see 4 crn making this communication I. wish to add that | gud Chase neck und neck: : EXTRAVAGANCE OF THE RADICALS toon the ee ~- re ip the (4 when they have | 1 shall unite Le ged eereneine ihe sores ofany | The platform with which Mr. Chase's private secre- Since the war closed, in 1865, the government has | wrung from them 80 many millions upon the ee ioe wnat generous support which has re- Sou, Pp mpc potty a spent for ite C ri . met Principal OF lmterest of the patie: debt aunts OB | Pretest that the debt compelled them to do #0; | cared me to Congress, again and again, by In- | “First—No mention of finance, Belmon:’s and down the Congressional y right, wagance and corruption are violations of the faith | More than it is now, which will be equat to an in- Perm penton The loaned to the na- | Crease Of one-quarter in the amount of currency. public debt, the sum of | while they were using the money thus collected to ? 0 forward f Business wi n sed ities, during so important a period in | prick Pomeroy's guns both spiked. written eee oes ciciccosy | encoucne prices wll te "rgaat and wr | ithnmn tere harhcen open sary nah veel | Ppt ashes he hse Pepi can | se har, of the Coun, al sre ein amon | "Aon Calvrtal nay domanded, pledged as the und poor. amor tf ‘ona repre: | will then dare Lo go om with useful enterprises. | milion ~ . . oe the most grateful recollec' of my life, leavi & neceasity, ‘Tue right of our soldlore to, demand tn i ga moni | We ind right here, the cause of our “rai tor military pa Thi i nearly one-third ot the | taivuuyg the wancaalerelit aba: staging ft to the | 2° ho rineutled ed TOClINg, Oe ees ainrd—Cniversa suffrage recommended (1) to the sacres + A fearful crime will be done by those wh. vexities national disgrace. Our ci math 5 a ol : from the regret! tutor natignal vanktaptey to tare, tote Goss ‘ashes the | tainted, But for that we could borrow money, Toe on et our ry are the. AT ¥ level pf the Turks, and endangering their securities | 11° the qiscnarge of the high trusts you have confided | ~ Fourth—Congresstonal reconstruction denounced. pensioners’ bounties thus gained at the cost of blood ani | Hritain does, at three per cent and cut down taxa- ealth and exposure. It ie worse that a government should be | tion, But for that our paper money wonld be thirteen million dollate each year, Since the w: by throwing upon them ‘he whole odium of tAX& | 4, meas your representative, Wit =. respect, I Now, Deacon Bascom, of the Corners, if you and tion? Then jet the Bast and the West, the North am your obliged and obedient servan' Postmaster Nasby want the play of “Hamiet” with good, | when our shipping has been swept from thy ‘ships or in Teco! overturned by corruption than by violence, A. virtuous and gold and silver would glitter in the hands of | byt pt from the oc and the South, the soldier, the toler, in . HOOPER. that part omitted—Chase without his rd; the pie wil regain thelr righte if torn from them, but where 48 2° | Tatore. But for that fact herd would bene question | been tnieen’ tee - po ‘by one To the electors of the Fourth Congressional district | big wig without the Judge—here you have tt. folate tae trememe how the bends are to be paid, and we never should | have now. no carrying 4 MT | UPiiterss Togtare. bonot. rights and constitutional | 12 the Sate of Massachusetts, epudiation, is it, to o pay In greenbacks? Well ‘These are the positions we took years ago in the | "ve heard of the greenback issue. But for the na- | While money is thus w, g avn popes: oo Mr. Hooper's district (Massachusetts Fourth) was | what is it ines, to repudiate one’s whole life? Gen- darkest hour of the war; these are’ the ‘tions we | “onal discredit business men would not be per- nthe army and nev: tlemen of the Fourth of July Convention, if you will At the conclusion of Governor Seymour's speech | formerly represented by Hon. Anson Burlingame, lessen the coat of t a " nominate Chase there will be no need to hoi the the West or to cheapen foul for the Intorers of the | heute hoe nt we ore ca trieAy Iucharac: | the Chinese Ambassador. Mr. Burlingame's first | world by mentioning repudiation in your dete. both of whom ¥ East, we are at once treated with Congress hai or election was secured by majority of thirty-six votes | Your candidate himself is such an embod Poot. Bun ation Of the negro. Upon the virtues of economy. if from this —_ over his democratic competitor, Hon. John T. Heard. | dation as will satisfy Brick Pomeroy, Rhett, gy CW RS in 1862, Mr. debt the rum of five by a PROGRESS OF THE CHASE HOVEMENT. ‘This was during the Pierce campaign o Bae Cie, tos Cav soetice 10 oiling Bin coms fee thie changed woes oe conauten have bean heh = op ua . Burlingame has travelled some since then. empty ae ae bx au fy Semen he payment, which would have cot down tt mt re about two thousand mulion dotars, our nea res te und Views im Favor of Judge Chase. Aiovernor Johnson and Mr. A. H. Stephens, 880, en Margaret Garner went up from lexed, and the disquiet and fears which now dis- and Ere ETO, Oe ee ee ore Tarp ‘vie ‘public mind would not exist. "Now if tuts ‘THR GOVERNOR IN 1864, ed cannot be helped we must bear it in the To show the anxiety we felt to avoid all sectional | Dest WAY Wwe can, and we must bn ipa yr controversies and our sense of the value of inter- | Homal and social and political troubles growing out Course with the Western States, T will quote from | Sie it yt can ‘be chow te ae ns, some cure. 1 I Jooan meee Of the same democratic Governor im | Dower, then ail sections, all classes aad all Interests should unite and turn them out. Fortunately we wh A deep interest ie felt with regard to our commerce with | have official statements to guide usin our inquiries. goud 7 gurgling waters of tne Ohio to bear witness pee oy B Souhers merce hse and the loss of our | We take the showing of the very parties under im- tt istecouss ‘ve dia hot tone Oo Sy tae tee Sanne Fue Sy ee of Georgin. na ist American democracy and American piety as cial prosperity upon that section of out country whieh aus | Peachment to show where guilt lies. To show the | this purpose, but spent it upon the begro pores, the | LO THE BOON OF THE HeRaLD:— [From the Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle, June 23.) aire hed seen them in the dastard qnd selfah face of 4-4 Tey commerce which adds eo | waste of those in power let us compare the cost «f } miliiary Gespotiems other abuses of governinent The prospect brightens, The good work goes By private letters received from the North and | the Ohio Governor. Since then only “the empty Hee Peas tai saa Werden ike | Gageans our me ott Yeats of Bea, tere | ‘hat our cto te iw The wurdaaw Me wore ic: | Uraveiy om. The movement in bebe of Mr. Chase, | west Welearm thal the, prsencs of tno ero catia, | ean ote man bes nung nt sonal chambak, Sera Rrether ay austen a icorous andgeser | or duly, 1968. Or tve Decal year ending daly, 1860, | payers alike, whey te vhomey Sas nae he she hak. | hich the Mananb—~ever quick to observe the wigns | Em Cooney donned ‘in the approaching | haunt the treasure for which thelt souls Were sold, sirtke of tolls upon Western I will take the estimate just made by the Committee | tisan put of Keeping the South out of Lg of (he Umee—begun #0 auspiciousty, increases daily | Convention. We believe their attendance there If Mr. Chase could have pledged the democratic we should strike off Rew York should exbibit that deyree or tmineey fe, Ehace: | of Ways and Means. Bear in mind that this Is the ures designed to benefit the West which will show our pur- ) best promise the blicans ¢an make on the eve of powe to keep up mon fatimnate commercial relationship | a Presidential el It will prove to be many with that portion of our P millions short of what they will spend, but we will (Loud applause.) These words quoted, not be- | give them the benefit of their own statements, After J juctive of much good, and that they | party§to republican principles he would have ren- tered, Urmativers foverninents could pe manufac | in volume and power. It is already widespresd in | would Overcome ell personal objectious which they | Hered noble service to the cause Of liberty. We The world NOt ouly saw this mon, Aion, | hue infuence Radleais and copperheads would fain | Phan Mehinits sucha course, Both Mi. Stephens | have longed for the last five years to see an ‘honest raise barriers to stay ite progress; bat their efforts sad Governor Johnson are very popular withthe | and earnest man (Mr. Chase is neither the money Wrung from the people by taxath it also naw that it made through & lomp sre fotie. The carfent is unthering such energy and | Western democracy, aud doubtiess couid render val- | these) thus lead the rebel party upward and so cause the words of any one man »| conseq the close of the war, and up to the 1st of July, 1866, ears still ater annual expe ot 7 nable service to the country by attending the Conven- | banish the negro question forever from our politics. hut to show the record of the great party which the War Department paid $165,000,000: Which 16 Vite the efure Conttel of tor Remtern Daten bs | Coommereme o Teeth parison ore boceieing convinced von. The theory that underlies the American democracy spiread them. The democratic party saw the evil in | $75,000,000 more than Was spent by the same depart- | given over, unchecked by the intetiigence of the | that the Chief Jastice @ the only candifate with - — which triumphed with Jefferson in 1801, is the true eee ag tay ae ie ety cloes rae iy oles | ment in the four years of Mr. Polk's admipistration, | white race, to untutored negroes whew tre peapie | whut there o any chances of winning against Grant. | Political Notes, American idea and the essence of equality, liberty jave always Kept our public Muances out of confu- | and whieh included the cost of the Mexican war. It | of the North have suid to be unft for voters: when | Even the New York World 9 few day® 69 | oa gorgiers who fought under Grant say they have | 284 fraternity. «But the demooratic at ee sion when in power. | ‘Ook nearly twice as much to stop a war under re- | the unfortunate Africans, drank with unusus! power | reluctanty admitted the truth of this propo | ld sold inca My an | monstrous child of negro hate and love of plunder. THE DEMOCRACY AGAINST INJUSTICE DONE THY wr’. | publican policy as it did to carry on @ war under | and goaded on by bad and designing. mn ritton. All men acknowledge that he combines | had enough of military government, and now they | Death is its only cure. In its ranks are some fow mC ago we pointed out the wrong done to | emocratic management, But I will not take this | shall make life and property unease and | within himeelt all the qualifications which are re- | want civility. deiuded, wel meaning men. And there have beem ‘West by making them send nearly twice as 1. 165,000,000 into the account. Let that close the war. | shall shock nd diagust the world with out- | quired of one who aapires to the higher place in the Pensacola (Florida) Commercia? has the fol. | HOUS When It seemed capable of regeneration. Bas soldiers to the war from each Congressioun ace July 1, 1885, abont three months after the sur- shall be forced to raise and pay still | gift of the people. Endowed with the most exalted | The Pensacola (Horii) Commercia! has t they were only the contortions of @ corpse mtmto- district as were demanded from Vermont jor M nder of Lee, up to July 1, 1868, the cost of govern- | g ot armies. Up to this time the South has | talenta for Matesmanship he lack® none of the ele- | lowing sensible allusion to the reaction in South | ing life. Its embrace has always been fatal te nag sae While the currency given to them whri¢ ent will be by oftictal and estimate had at least an intelligent tyranny in military officers. ot of character that beat the occupant of the | Carolina:—“At this rate the colored and white voters | living men. But like joined like when the Chie the banking systemn Was not one-quarter as great. | $520,300,208. Up to July 1, 1 y the estimate of | Every man who is not blinded by hate or bigotry | Presidential chair rds a @ : + have | Justice staked worthless counters against aithougn the Wesvern States needed currency tho | the chairman ¢ Jointittee of Ways and M looks forward with horror to the condition of th A majority of the will soon expel the political vampires that have | promises. Both cheats were cheated and ¥ siost, The act authorizing the banks of New York | Ut wll ve ¢077,975,.08, niakipg the Gost of gove South wader aegrg domination. The bad faith to the | potwm aad ty 7 4! fastened upon the throat of their heroic State, aud { harm done WENDE PHILGIPA : ? regu! er EEOOEEOoO&<— Ee ee E

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